This time we kick off at Porter’s Park in Radlett, Herts. I don’t know it:
Coombe Wood is a diminutive 18-hole course (only just over 5,000 yards from the men’s medal tees). I played there a lot in the 1970s and it was good fun with some really enjoyable holes. It is a near neighbour of Coombe Hill in the suburbs of Kingston upon Thames. There will be more on a later thread, including photos of both courses.
Malden is also in the vicinity but I’ve not played it.
Coombe Hill is a good Abercromby course. There will be more photos on a later thread.
But now we go to Scotland, simply because these are the next photos I downloaded! St Andrews, first:
Next some pictures of Turnberry which are undated, but let us assume ca 1925. The hotel is visible, and the air base, and possibly some fragments of golf course at the south end.
Prestwick in ca 1925 would, only a year before, have hosted its final Open Championship. In some photos another course or courses is/are visible on the landward side of the railway. They must now lie beneath the sprawling Prestwick Airport.
Duddingston in the Lothians, a Willie Park course from 1895. Was it still intact in the mid 1920s?
Longniddry is a lovely Colt course on the banks of the Firth of Forth. I don’t think it claims to be a links, but it is very enjoyable. I haven’t played it since the 1980s.
Most of the City of Perth is visible here, including the King James VI course on its island in the middle of the river:
On the lower right is the opening hole of the Royal Troon Portland Course which may or may not have been reconstructed by MacKenzie after the First World War. If Neil Crafter sees this I’m sure he’ll update us. Beyond is one or more (Lochgreen?) of the Troon municipal courses, on one of which the young Jack Nicklaus qualified for the 1962 Open Championship.
A fragment of North Berwick. The photographer’s brief appears to have been to get the school, not the course!
More from St Andrews:
King’s Links, Aberdeen:
Carnoustie. It’s difficult to pick out much detail.
The next one took me by surprise. It is Southerness. I hadn’t realised a course had existed there before Ross’s lovely links completed just after the Second World War. I presume this is mid 1920s.
Gullane and environs:
More later.